KOffice 1.4 Released 272
An anonymous reader writes "The KDE Project today announced the immediate release of KOffice 1.4 for Linux and Unix operating systems. This release is a large step towards embracing the OASIS OpenDocument file format which has become an approved standard for office file formats. This format is also used by the upcoming OpenOffice.org 2.0, thus providing high interoperability. New applications in the 1.4 release: Krita - a pixel based image manipulation application (screenshots, movie) and Kexi - an integrated data management application (screenshots)."
MS Office (Score:5, Funny)
Now we only have to wait til 2020 for MS to release MS Office with support for Oasis, que it's compatibility all around us!
Re:MS Office (Score:5, Informative)
--
Evan
Re:MS Office (Score:2)
What's the point? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or what about a standard desktop?
It's diversity that makes linux great. Not that it's free, but that if you don't like something you can change it. You can even publish the change so others who didn't like the difference can use your work and not reinvent the wheel. By giving people choices: KDE/Gnome, Vi/EMacs, Koffice/OOo; you are in fact ensuring that a larger base leaves Microsoft, because you have something that more people like. Not everyone likes everythi
Re:What's the point? (Score:2, Insightful)
For people (ie: The Mass Market) what is needed is som
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
For just about every product there are a wide variety of goods, most of which do not appeal to the buyers of their choice. People who shop for the cheapest processed food cheese slices seldom also shop for aged bleu cheese. And yet both seem to do fine, and most grocers carry both. Is it shocking that there might be people who like Windows and people who like Linux and that they can (*gasp*) coexist? Or even people who like OSX, people who like BSD, people who like Solaris? Some brands will appear and disappear, just like certain brands of cheeses. Others will appear and be too niche for big grocery stores... you'll have to order them from gourmet places.
But you seldom find people who like bleu cheese ranting that bleu cheese should be more like Kraft cheese slices because that "is what prevent[s] it from getting to the mass market". I don't think bleu cheese will ever have the market share of Kraft cheese slices. And I'm okay with that.
--
Evan
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
That's not a valid comparison. Ferrari sports cars use the same infrastructure as any other car: the same roads, the same fuel delivery network, the same vehicle registration laws, etc.
Right now, computers are much more like the railroads were a hundred and fifty years ago -- a mess of different, incompatible standards that don't work together, a
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Yes, and computers use the same roads (TCP/IP, usually over Ethernet or PPP), the same fuel delivery network (USB for data and IDE for storage, which wasn't the case in the early days of PCs), the same vehicle registration laws... okay, you don't yet have to register your computer...
Seriously - using KDE, I can log into my bank, view a movie, type up a
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Who are you fooling. Your grandmother couldn't help your aunt fix Windows, let alone DOS or any other Operating System for that matter.
That's what grandchildren are for--to lend a hand to their elders.
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Very Wrong (Score:2)
With MS office, it does not exchange nicely with anybody else. Worse, it does not exchange nicely with past version.
I thought so, too. (Score:4, Informative)
Of the core group, only 4 are not sun employees, so there is nothing like e.g. the kernel or kde.
Re:I thought so, too. (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:4, Insightful)
If somebody didn't look at it and say "I can make something slightly better", we'd be reading Slashdot on clay tablets.
--
Evan
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Funny)
Resume normal transmission...
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
-matthew
Re:What's the point? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm glad we have two strong, popular office suites that don't compete for resources -- that is, KDE folks probably have little interest in hacking OpenOffice and vice versa. Now that they'll be sharing a common file format, it'll be nice to be able to pick the right tool for a particular job and know that users can still view the results in their environment of choice.
KIOslaves are a bad idea (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:KIOslaves are a bad idea (Score:2)
Yeah. That sucks.
You obviously haven't thought about this.
Re:KIOslaves are a bad idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:KIOslaves are a bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
...until you bring in cross-platform compatibility as a requirement. I run KDE on FreeBSD, not Linux, so kernel layers are right out. By the time you go through all the work of making nice, portable virtual filesystem layers, I imagine you'll inevitably end up with something at least as complex as KIO slaves anyway.
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
-matthew
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Informative)
Try the 1.9m* snapshots. Feels a LOT snappier.
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure what you are referring to, but OOo 2.0 does not use native widgets - it fakes them.
There are a variety of ways to do native support - faking it is the worst in my opinion.
Yet another reason why there is a need for office suites other than OOo.
But please make KOffice available on Windows. You would multiply your potential user base hugely.
Excellent troll (Score:2)
Monoculture bad, diversity good.
Yes there is a point (Score:4)
For 90% of the users out there, its features are more then enough..
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
You could have made the same argument against KHTML. I think the KDE project has shown that there is plenty of room for slick, lightweight alternatives. Your post is really more of a troll than anything. How is it that KOffice adds two new apps and tons of features when "OpenOffice has all the momentum" ? And *best* coders ? Really, who are you to judge ? OpenOffice is the undoubtedly the bigger project. Does
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Re:What's the point? (Score:2)
Sarge (Score:2)
I'm sure there will be .debs available on KDEs site soon though.
Re:Sarge (Score:2)
--
Evan
Re:Sarge (Score:2)
Expect More Interest (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:4, Informative)
That was before Qt was GPLed. It's now completely Free Software (with caps). When Qt 4.0 is released, rumor has it that the Windows version will be GPLed as well.
--
Evan
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:5, Informative)
Not a rumor ;)
QT 4 announcment [trolltech.com]
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:2)
I suspect you overestimate the amount of people who care more about RMS's ethics than getting the job done. The fact is, businesses everywhere are building their entire infrastructure on Java. I doubt any of them is going to stop using Ooo because it has some minor dependencies on Java. The Microsoft shops certainly couldn't care less about RMS's ethics. And I doubt even the majority of the rare 100% OSS shops care.
I
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:2)
It has been demonstrated time and time again that there will always be a miniscule but extremely shrill segment that hates Qt and will come up with any excuse to shit on it. For a while the excuse was that Trolltech didn't apologize to Richard Stallman (seriously!), then it was that it wasn't crossplatform enough (go figure). For a while it was that the Canopy G
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:2)
By GNU I assume you mean the FSF in which case QT is now a GPLed product. They are happy. Stallman has even indicated this. Debian long ago dropped any issues they had. RedHat is Gnome house but they are actively working to try and end any hard feelings that exist. At this point KOffice for example considers the RH-enterprise version to be the most debugged for a platform.
It seems to be HP, IBM, Sun, CA, etc... that are against QT and no
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:3)
The default file dialog in Qt uses its platforms native file dialog. But X11 doesn't have a native dialog. So it made one. If you don't like it QFileDialog, however, you can use KFileDialog instead. Or write your own. Problem solved. As for which kind of file dialog is best, I prefer Qt's native file dialog ot GTK+' dialog.
While you may not like any of the KDE themes, other people may not like any of the GNOME themes. This doesn't make them wrong and you right, however.
Knockoffs of Motif and Window
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Expect More Interest (Score:2)
mirror of video (Score:2, Informative)
No Windows version? (Score:3, Interesting)
And yes, this was intended to be tongue-in-cheek.
Re:No Windows version? (Score:3, Informative)
The news has to get out sometime (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:The news has to get out sometime (Score:2)
Near as I can tell, KOffice doesn't run on Windows.
Re:The news has to get out sometime (Score:2)
Re:The news has to get out sometime (Score:2)
That is something like 2% of the population. They support something like 20% of the population by giving them advanced features. The nice thing is this 2% will be easy to convert once we genuinely have a superior OSS offi
Re:The news has to get out sometime (Score:2)
Let us know when you find someone who has paid retail list for a legit copy of Office. Student-Teacher Edition can be found at $150 and under and installs on three PCs.
OpenDocument for Spreadsheets (Score:5, Insightful)
I want to see an open format for documents, including spreadsheets, so I'm concerned that OpenDocument might not be sufficient.
[1] http://blogs.gnome.org/view/mortenw/2005/06/16/0 [gnome.org]
Re:OpenDocument for Spreadsheets (Score:4, Insightful)
However, the Nokia Maemo team will be helping AbiWord and Gnumeric improve their ODT import/export support[1]. For what it's worth, when I've been working on the SXW/ODT import/export in AbiWord, I only sparingly use the official specification, as it's too large and cumbersome to be of great use. It's so much easier to create interesting test cases and map those back to AbiWord's semantics. I imagine that the Nokia guys will be doing something similar when they add better ODT support in Gnumeric.
[1] http://www.abisource.com/mailinglists/abiword-dev
Re:OpenDocument for Spreadsheets (Score:2)
Krita... (Score:4, Informative)
It's probably behind the name anyway.
Re:Krita... (Score:5, Interesting)
But Krita has always had trouble with naming. KImageShop, the first name was obviously unsuitable. The next name, Krayon, was nuked by the well-known German law shark von Gravenreuth. Kandinsky (my favourite) was mooted, but Krita was chosen -- years before my involvement in Krita.
But three names is enough, I'm not going for another rename!
Boudewijn Rempt
Re:Krita... (Score:2)
An interesting thing to watch (Score:5, Insightful)
But word processing documents are another matter entirely. People care about the size and position of any item on a page. It really needs to be very exact from implementation to implementation. I haven't looked at the specs for this document format (and I do not plan to unless I have a week or more of insomnia) so I don't know how detailed the description is. But now that OO.o and KOffice both support the format, it will be interesting to write something in one and open in the other. My hopes are that whatever I do in one will look identical in the other.
(With OO.o being cross-platform and all, why would KOffice be used? I gave up on AbiWord in favor of OO.o for that very reason...)
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:5, Informative)
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:2)
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:2)
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:3, Insightful)
Forgivable? Expected! No one should reasonably think that a page will render the same on IE at 640x480 as Konqueror at 1600x1200. The web is not print; it's a complete different media.
But word processing documents are another matter entirely. People care about the size and position of any item on a page. It really needs to be very exact from implementation to im
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:3, Interesting)
I call BS on this. On different papers, yes, the layouts would be different. And that's what a word processor is for, in general, rendering something onto paper. If a Linux and a Windows version of the same word processor (or format) were showing a document for printing on 8.5x11 paper, there's no reas
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it won't. Any sane and sensible page layout program specifies the size of the print area, not the size of the margins. And, if your word processor allows you to set either, it's a pretty good indication that it's intended to be used as a page layout program, not as general purpose text editor.
If other word processors are making the mistake of copying MS Word's broken behaviour on something this simple, I shudder to think what other stupid mis
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:5, Interesting)
Standards for layout, like Postscript, tend to do better at the things you want them to. But then, that's like saying a boat takes you across water better than a city bus.
--
Evan
Re:An interesting thing to watch (Score:2)
(Ignoring your implication that there are differing levels of "exact")...
Let me know when MS gets it right. In MS-Word, changing your *printer driver* can affect the layout of the page.
Kexi is awesome (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Kexi is awesome (Score:2)
Kubuntu Packages and Live CD (Score:2, Interesting)
Packages are available for Kubuntu as is a Live CD with KOffice 1.4 (and KDE 3.4.1).
Kubuntu Hoary KOffice CD and packages [kubuntu.org].
more screenshots (Score:5, Informative)
Gooey (Score:4, Insightful)
I get the impression that none of the windowing toolkits offer such widgets. Seems that Adobe had to roll their own for Windows and the old Mac OS (just checked Apple's dev tools: there are regular, small and mini sizes available for many things, if not all).
I think just having that look (and the increased efficiency of screen real estate it brings) would go a long way toward legitimizing open source graphics apps among their target audience.
Re:Gooey (Score:5, Insightful)
MS Office compatibility (Score:2)
It'd be great if OSS software had built-in support for the MS format before Office 12 was out. Sure MS, could break the format right before the release, but I bet they'd be reluctant as other companies would complain.
Yay, but... (Score:3, Insightful)
I applaud the work accomplished with KDE.
but....
At this point in time I think that the capability of OpenOffice is a long ways beyond these guys.. Initially I would say, "why bother", but then that's not the Open Source way. There needs to be competition for every software application even if someone like me judges one to be far superior to the competition.
So I applaud the work accomplished.
Re:Smoking server? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:YES! (Score:3, Informative)
Now go troll somewhere else.
Re:YES! (Score:2)
Krita = Crayon (swedish) (Score:2)
Actually, it's even better than that. If you suspect the usual KDE naming convention (Add K in front of whatever), and remove the K, you get "rita". Which means "draw" in Swedish...
My only strange question is how it got that name, when none of the developers [koffice.org] seems to have a swedish origin. Or am I missing someone?
Re:YES! (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean how can you not respect a product named after a year or a product whose entire name consists of two letters!.
Just don't be around when XP flips out and kills all those stupid open source names by cutting their heads off for no reason!
Re:YES! (Score:2)
Re:The end of data (Score:2)
For one document my preference is XHTML documents with inline CSS styling. It's ASCII, and it can look nice too. :)
For multiple documents I'll use a separate CSS file(s).
Funny thing, I still get brain dead idiots asking me to send them a word document because either their email program displays the file inline and they don't know how to save an attachment to a separate file without Outlook/Express doing it for them OR their copy of Word is so old it doesn't recognise simple CSS, and I keep telling th
Re:The end of data (Score:4, Informative)
Not to mention the fact that OASIS is ASCII, just with markup and gzipped.
Re:The end of data (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The end of data (Score:2)
"Come on," he says, "you can learn C#, I know you can! Why be an old fart using C++ and Unix when you can be like those hip and savvy
Sigh.
Re:That is cool (Score:2)
Open Source Names (Score:5, Funny)
Nobody demands that people take their volunteer work and then name it something that's maximally useful and no fun for them, but there are some times when it's quite regrettable that people have made choices.
* A good amount of open source and Unixy software is potentially offensive. The GIMP is a very obvious example. Some cultures have a problem with the GNOME startup foot. I've had the phrase "I'll go finger her and find out" elicit a few chuckles. When someone sees the phrase "spawning 50 children...killing children...warning, zombie child present", sure, it makes sense to people who do Unix, but it definitely weirds out some other folks.
* Some names are awkward. GNU/Linux is awkward, and is not going to catch on, ever (Stallman would be better off pushing for "GNUix" or something else). "umount" may be shorter than "unmount", but I doubt the typing savings are worth the confusion caused over the years...same goes for "passwd".
* Some names sound amateurish. "MySQL" is a good example.
* Some names are homonyms. "lynx" was already a pun, and then the "links" browser's name made life much more annoying for text-based browser users. "pyne" and "pine" are similar.
* Some names are inside jokes that then become incomprehensible and confusing to people who lack knowledge of 30 years of computing history. The "elm" email reader spawned "pine", "balsa", and "mahogany". Good luck explaining to someone why they type "mahogany" to read their email. The "more" text pager (which stuck the text "More" at the bottom of each screen, allowing the user to hit enter to see another line of text) was replaced by the "less" text pager -- "less is more" was probably uproariously funny when the code first started being produced, but is now just another barrier for the new Unix user.
* Some names have mutated into greater inexplicability. The "dillo" lightweight GTK web browser (aside from the unfortunate similarity to the English word "dildo") comes from "Armadillo".
* There is the infamous "GNOME projects start with 'g', KDE projects with 'k'". At one point, X11 applications went through this same growing phase with "x". GNOME seems to have thankfully stopped doing this, though the KDE folks *still* do this occasionally. Python-based applications frequently have a "py" prefix.
* Some authors (perhaps due to a fear that packagers will rename their software to make its name more difficult to type) make their software explicitly have a lower-case first letter, violating normal English capitalization rules. "xine" is a good example of this.
* Some authors take delight in difficult-to-say names. Depressingly, I'm writing this on a website called "slashdot.org".
Re:Open Source Names (Score:2)
Re:Open Source Names (Score:2)
More Open Source Names (Score:2)
* Another good offensive example, "pan", the popular GTK newsreader, started life as the "Pimp Ass Newsreader". It was hosted on superpimp.org (which, to this day, redirects to pan's homepage), and I suspect that the effort to purge the offensive background from pan and popular usage was not trivial.
* Occasionally open source names simply collide. The open source world is actually pretty good about this (partly because of the good databases of open source software), but the "Firebird" phase o
what's this got to do with open source? (Score:3, Insightful)
2) New users will naturally refer to the name of the distribution, most of which are marvelously easy to pronounce.
3-4) If you're confused by this, you're probably not using a CLI mail client. I mean, hello, this is 2005! Also, does "Eudora" just scream email to you? How about "Outlook"?
5) Does "Opera" just scream web-
Re:Krap (Score:2)
So, say I want a KDE photo app...... Kphoto? Klab? Kimp? It seriously limits the availability of an average user to find your program if you tenuously manage to link a witty 'K-name' from a name that describes your app correctly.
Re:Krap (Score:3, Informative)
So, say I want a KDE photo app...... Kphoto? Klab? Kimp? It seriously limits the availability of an average user to find your program if you tenuously manage to lin
Other point of view (Score:2)
That is the benefit of the naming convention - you know what is a KDE app and what is not. You don't need to waste your time on any GTK crap that can't even open an sftp:// [ftp] link.